Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Kamaran Ihsan Salih

Quote by Kamaran Ihsan Salih

Author

Kamaran Ihsan Salih

Browse famous quotes and profile details for Kamaran Ihsan Salih. more

You May Also Like

“I told him I loved him, He didn’t say anything back. But I saw kindness in that silence, How many people say “I love you” without meaning it? His quiet felt honest, A reminder that silence speaks. Even when he didn’t love me back, He gave me one more reason to love him more. Instead of drowning in my anger That he didn’t love me, I chose to look deeper within. I realized anger is weight we bear, And holding onto it only destroys us. Love doesn’t need to be returned to be real. When others don’t mirror my heart, I find strength in acceptance. Each time I share my truth, I uncover the beauty of who I am, And the many ways love can bloom. Even in pain, I choose to grow. To love others, even when it’s not returned, Is a gift. And the greatest love of al? To cherish myself for loving unconditionally.”

“Codes and semiotic conventions are a challenge for human communication, since they seal off people with a privacy protection label and make them accessible only by means of a barcode that might estrange them from their surroundings but, at the same time, procure them a kind of reassurance in their comfort zone. This dialectical situation may keep them struggling during their entire life. ("The unbreakable code " )”

“The word dialectic (in dialectical behavior therapy) means to balance and compare two things that appear very different or even contradictory. In dialectical behavior therapy, the balance is between change and acceptance (Linehan, 1993a). You need to change the behaviors in your life that are creating more suffering for yourself and others while simultaneously also accepting yourself the way you are. This might sound contradictory, but it’s a key part of this treatment. Dialectical behavior therapy depends on acceptance and change, not acceptance or change.”

“It’s not by accident that people talk of a state of confusion as not being able to see the wood for the trees, or of being out of the woods when some crisis is surmopunted. It is a place of loss, confusion, terror and anger, a place where you can, like Dante, find yourself going down into Hell. But if it’s any comfort, the dark wood isn’t just that. It’s also a place of opportunity and adventure. It is the place in which fortunes can be reversed, hearts mended, hopes reborn.”

“He saw the face that stared at him now, ugly, degenerate and old, and he knew that his life counted therefore as nothing, that no achievement lay behind him, no battle won, no beauty possessed; that Julius Lévy was a name already vanished and lost in the sky, that had never been, that would not go on; and he wondered if there was no continuation of life, not future, no treasure beyond the stars, and if in reality there was neither God nor man, nor any world at all.”